Armed with only a wacom tablet, less-than-mediocre drawing skills and an acute sense of smell, professional photographer Ted Sabarese guesses how individual images were lit by other photographers and then sketches corresponding lighting diagrams. He also offers, sometimes humorous, behind-the-scenes insight. It's what you always wanted to know but didn't know who to ask.

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Gary Salter’s comedic lighting of elderly footballers

Gary’s well-conceived and beautifully-lit image illustrates the aftermath of a seriously-senior football match. Every detail is accounted for (I personally love the prosthetic leg hanging off the back wall) and the casting is superb. Gary shot this with 5 lights.

Lighting: The key light on our foreground hero and his blood pressure-checking teammate is a medium softbox at f11 boomed high above and slightly to camera right of the pair. A silver beauty dish at f16 (+1 stop) is high out of frame to camera right and positioned half way between camera and the rear wall. This produces the strong highlights atop their heads and their sides. Another beauty dish at f11 is boomed from camera right five feet off the rear wall and aimed toward the players resting on the back bench. A 7” reflector at f16 (+1 stop) is boomed in from camera left near the rear wall and is aimed downward and left. The fill comes from a magnum reflector at f5.6 (-2 stops) shot through a 6’x6’ silk, positioned six feet to camera left.

Comments: An avid footballer and fantasy football coach himself, Gary named the squad “Zimmer” for a not-so-random reason. Barry Zimmer’s fantasy team had badly beaten Gary’s two weeks prior. And Zimmer, never a gracious winner, made sure to rub Gary’s nose in it.